BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0001] The present invention relates in general to oscillators and specifically to crystal-controlled
oscillators in which the crystal is replaced with a two-port surface acoustic wave
resonator filter.
2. DESCRIPTION OF RELATED ART INCLUDING INFORMATION DISCLOSED UNDER 37 CFR 1.97 AND
1.98
[0002] It is well known in the prior art that one way of making an oscillator is to apply
positive feedback to an amplifier. It is also known that the effects of temperature
and aging of inductors and capacitors are major factors in frequency instability in
oscillators. The instability frequently causes large variations from the design frequency.
It is desired that oscillator frequencies be maintained to within a very few parts
per million. Although stability of that order can be reached with well designed temperature
compensated circuits, they are difficult and expensive to maintain.
[0003] It is well known that the resonant circuit of an oscillator can be replaced with
a mechanically vibrating piezoelectric crystal. A great increase in frequency stability
is obtained with the use of the crystal. In such crystals, if mechanical stresses
are applied onto opposite faces, electrical charges appear on some other pair of faces.
The converse effect is also present; that is, if electrical charges are placed on
two opposite crystal faces by applying a voltage across the faces, a mechanical strain
and change in dimensions are produced between two other opposite faces.
[0004] An alternating voltage applied to electrodes positioned on the faces of the crystal
causes the crystal to vibrate and at a natural frequency of mechanical resonance,
these vibrations become very large. The crystal tends to vibrate at a natural frequency
unless driven and these mechanical resonances depend only on crystal characteristics
as is well known in the art.
[0005] Since a crystal acts as an electrical resonant circuit, it is only natural that it
be employed as the frequency-determining resonant circuit for an oscillator. There
are many crystal-controlled feedback oscillators. These crystal-controlled oscillator
circuits have an amplifier, a signal feedback circuit, a crystal for controlling the
oscillator frequency, and an output signal terminal. One of the well-known crystal-controlled
oscillators is the Colpitts oscillator using a series resonant crystal to ground a
transistor amplifier base. Another is the Colpitts oscillator with the crystal in
a series resonant mode between the emitter of the transistor amplifier and the junction
of two capacitors coupling the collector to a ground terminal.
[0006] Another of the most commonly used crystal oscillator circuits is the Pierce oscillator.
This is basically a common-source Colpitts circuit with the crystal forming a resonant
circuit with a first capacitor that couples the source and the drain and a second
capacitor that couples the gate and the source with the source being at ground potential.
[0007] Still another well-known circuit is the Miller oscillator in which both the crystal
and an output tank circuit look like inductive reactances at the oscillation frequency.
[0008] Yet another well-known oscillator is the Clapp oscillator which is actually a Pierce
oscillator with the base rather than the emitter at AC ground. The Clapp oscillator
can be thought of as a grounded-base amplifier stage loaded with a tank circuit. The
tank circuit has a capacitive tap from which energy is fed back to the emitter.
[0009] In all of these circuits, it is well known that the amplifiers have some degree of
nonlinearity. The existence of nonlinearity implies distortion. In other words, the
output will contain not only the desired frequency but also some of its harmonics.
In some applications, the presence of harmonics may be unimportant but in others there
is a requirement of a sine wave of the highest possible purity. One fairly obvious
way of removing unwanted harmonics is to pass the output of the oscillator through
a suitable tuned band-pass or low-pass filter. This works quite well if the frequency
of the oscillator is fixed, but it is very inconvenient if a variable frequency is
required as the filters then have to be tuned in step with the change in desired frequency.
Such filters are normally designed with capacitors and inductors to form either low-pass
or band-pass filters coupling the oscillator output to the desired load Of course,
there are other types of filter circuits that can also be used. Such filters are expensive
and require the use of additional space where space is at a premium.
[0010] It would be advantageous to have a crystal-controlled oscillator that has an output
signal containing very low harmonics and which can be simply and easily constructed.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0011] The present invention overcomes the disadvantages of the prior art by enabling any
crystal-controlled oscillator circuit to provide an output signal having very low
harmonics contained therein simply by removing the crystal in the circuit and replacing
it with a two-port surface acoustic wave resonator filter. While the term "surface
acoustic wave resonator filter" will be used herein for ease of explanation, it should
be understood that other piezoelectric devices could be used such as STW (surface
transverse wave) devices. One port of the surface acoustic wave resonator filter is
coupled to the terminals where the crystal had been removed. The other port serves
as the output terminals for the oscillator signal frequency. The first port of the
two-port SAW resonator filter acts similar to a crystal to determine the oscillation
frequency of the oscillator and, in some oscillators, also provides the necessary
feedback. The second port terminals provide the output terminal for the oscillator
frequency. The two-port SAW resonator filter is designed at the desired oscillation
frequency and thus not only provides the necessary crystal effect for the oscillator
but also provides necessary filtering to produce an output signal with low harmonic
content without any additional components being required in the circuit. Thus, existing
oscillator circuits are easily modified and original equipment is easily manufactured
using the present invention.
[0012] Thus, it is an object to the present invention to generally provide a crystal-controlled
oscillator circuit using a two-port surface acoustic wave resonator filter with one
port replacing the crystal and the other port serving as the output terminal to provide
the output oscillator signal with greatly reduced harmonics.
[0013] The present invention relates to an improved crystal-controlled oscillator circuit
having an amplifier, a signal feedback circuit, a crystal for controlling the oscillator
frequency, and an output signal terminal, and wherein a piezoelectric material having
first and second electrical signal ports therein is added to the crystal-controlled
oscillator circuit with the first signal port replacing the crystal in the oscillator
circuit and the second signal port forming the output terminal for providing the oscillator
frequency having substantially reduced harmonics when compared to the output of the
original crystal-controlled oscillator.
[0014] It is another object of the present invention to provide a two-port SAW resonator
filter as the piezoelectric material having the first and second ports thereon.
[0015] It is still another object of the present invention to improve crystal-controlled
oscillator circuits such as the Colpitts oscillator circuit, the Pierce oscillator
circuit, the Miller oscillator circuit, the Clapp oscillator circuit, and any crystal-controlled
feedback oscillator circuit.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0016] These and other features of the present invention will be more fully disclosed when
taken in conjunction with the following DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
in which like numerals represent like elements and in which:
FIG. 1 is a circuit diagram of a prior art Colpitts oscillator using the crystal in
the series-resonance mode;
FIG. 2 illustrates the same oscillator with the crystal being replaced by the two-port
SAW resonator filter to form the novel oscillator of the present invention;
FIG. 3 is a circuit diagram of a prior art Colpitts oscillator using a series-resonant
crystal to ground the transistor base;
FIG. 4 is a circuit diagram of the Colpitts oscillator of FIG. 3 with the crystal
therein being replaced by the two-port surface acoustic wave resonator filter of the
present invention to provide a Colpitts oscillator circuit having an output signal
with very low harmonic content;
FIG. 5 is a circuit diagram of a prior art Pierce crystal oscillator;
FIG. 6 is the circuit diagram of the Pierce crystal oscillator of FIG. 5 with the
crystal therein replaced by the two-port surface acoustic wave resonator filter of
the present invention to provide an oscillator output signal having very low harmonic
content;
FIG. 7 is a circuit diagram of a prior art Clapp oscillator circuit having a crystal
therein;
FIG. 8 is the Clapp oscillator circuit of FIG. 7 with the crystal therein replaced
by the two-port surface acoustic wave resonator filter of the present invention;
FIG. 9 is a schematic diagram of a Miller oscillator circuit utilizing a crystal therein;
FIG. 10 is a circuit diagram of the Miller oscillator circuit of FIG. 9 with the crystal
therein being replaced by the two-port surface acoustic wave resonator filter of the
present invention;
FIG. 11(a) is the equivalent electrical circuit of a crystal and FIG. 11(b) is a graph
of the reactance curves for the circuit of FIG. 11(a); and
FIG. 12 is a Smith chart illustrating the desired inductive operation of the present
SAW port that replaces the crystal of the prior art.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
[0017] While the circuits of FIGS. 1 - 10 herein represent the most common feedback oscillators
having an amplifier in the form of usually a junction transistor operating in a common-base
configuration, it is to be understood that other transistor connections and other
active devices such as FETs or integrated circuit RF amplifiers can be used and that
the invention can be used with any crystal-controlled feedback oscillator circuit.
[0018] In the circuit of FIG. 1, the Colpitts oscillator is a well-known oscillator circuit
that includes the transistor 10 as an amplifier or gain element, the crystal 12 serving
as the signal feedback circuit and also establishing the oscillator frequency, and
a load resistor 14. The output signal can be developed at an output terminal 16 across
the load resistance 14. The piezoelectric crystal 12 has an equivalent electrical
circuit as shown in FIG. 11(a). It has an inductance, L
x' a resistance, R
x' and a capacitance, C
s' all in series and the series circuit is paralleled by a capacitance, C
p' that represents the capacitance introduced by the crystal electrodes. FIG. 11(b)
illustrates the reactance curves for the crystal circuit of FIG. 11(a) and shows that
there is a possibility of both resonant and anti-resonant modes of operation occurring
as illustrated by curves 2 and 4, respectively.
[0019] FIG. 2 is an improved version of the Colpitts oscillator of FIG. 1 according to the
present invention. It will be noticed in FIG. 2 that the crystal 12 of FIG. 1 has
been replaced with an element 18 formed of a piezoelectric material having a first
electrical signal port 20 and a second electrical signal port 22. The terminals of
the first signal port 20 are connected to the terminals 24 and 26 from which the crystal
12 was removed. The second signal port terminals 22 form the output terminal for providing
the oscillator frequency. Because the element 18 is a two-port SAW resonator filter,
designed at the frequency at which the circuit oscillates, it has relatively low harmonic
levels at the output. The first port 20 of the two-port SAW resonator filter 18 has
a similar equivalent circuit as shown in FIG. 11(a). In order for the filter 18 to
operate most efficiently in the application of the present invention, the impedance
characteristic of the equivalent circuit should be a low-loss circuit with the value
of R
x and C
P minimized as much as practicable and the circuit should have a primarily inductive
mode of operation as shown by curve 6 on the well-known Smith chart in FIG. 12. Such
design characteristics can be obtained by those skilled in the SAW device art.
[0020] FIG. 3 is a circuit diagram of a Colpitts oscillator similar to that shown in FIG.
1 except that it uses a series-resonant crystal 12 to ground the transistor base.
The crystal 12 grounds the base of transistor 10 at terminal 28 at the crystal center
frequency. Thus, the frequency of the oscillator is established. The output is developed
across resistor 14 at terminal 16. Again, because of the nonlinearity of amplifier
10, harmonics are found in the output signal of the oscillator.
[0021] FIG. 4 is a circuit diagram of the oscillator in FIG. 3 except that the crystal 12
has been replaced with the two-port SAW resonator filter 18 with its input port terminals
20 being connected to the terminals 28 and 30 to which the crystal 12 had previously
been connected. The output signal is taken from the second port 22. Again, because
the device 18 is a SAW resonator filter, the output terminals 22 generate a signal
that has very low harmonic content when compared to the original crystal feedback
oscillator of FIG. 3.
[0022] FIG. 5 is a circuit diagram of one of the most commonly used oscillator circuits
known as the Pierce oscillator. This is basically a common-source Colpitts circuit
with the crystal forming a resonance circuit with the source-drain capacitor C
D and the gate-ground capacitor C
G and the internal capacitances of the FET 32. The circuit can be tuned by varying
both C
G and C
D or by adding a small variable capacitance across the crystal 12. The RF load resistance
is R
D. It could be bypassed with an RF choke if necessary to keep direct current out of
the load. The blocking capacitor C
B is intended to be a short circuit to the RF signals. The Pierce circuit lacks an
inductor and its frequency may be changed without retuning by replacing the crystal.
This is important in applications that require transmitters and receivers that are
capable of rapid switching between several crystal-controlled channels.
[0023] FIG. 6 is a circuit illustrating the Pierce oscillator of FIG. 5 modified to form
an oscillator of the present invention. In FIG. 6, the crystal 12 has been replaced
with the two-pole SAW resonator filter 18. It has a first port 20 whose terminals
are connected between the capacitor C
B and the drain 34 of the FET 32. Its output terminals 22 are formed using the terminals
of the second port. Again, this oscillator circuit produces an output frequency that
has very low harmonic content compared with the oscillator of FIG. 5.
[0024] FIG. 7 is a circuit diagram of a prior art crystal oscillator known as the Clapp
oscillator. The Clapp oscillator circuit shown in FIG. 7 is actually a Pierce oscillator
with the base rather than the emitter at AC ground. The Clapp oscillator can be thought
of as a grounded-base amplifier stage 36 with a tank circuit. The tank has a capacitive
tap from which energy is fed back to the emitter. Again, the crystal 12 establishes
the frequency of oscillation of the circuit. The output is derived across load resistor
R
L through coupling capacitor C
c.
[0025] FIG. 8 is a novel circuit diagram of the Clapp crystal oscillator of FIG. 7 that
has been modified to form an oscillator of the present invention. Again, it has a
two-port SAW resonator filter 18 having input port terminals 20 connected between
the collector of transistor 36 and ground in place of the crystal 12. It also has
its output port terminals 22 from which the output frequency signals are taken. Again,
for reasons previously given, the output frequency of this oscillator has very low
harmonic content.
[0026] The well-known Miller oscillator circuit of the prior art is illustrated in FIG.
9 in schematic representation. It is similar to a tuned-input, tuned-output circuit
in which both the crystal 12 and the output tank circuit 38 look like inductive reactances
at the oscillation frequency. Although the output of FET 40, or drain circuit, could
consist of just an inductor, a higher effective reactance can be achieved by means
of the tuned circuit 38. The principal advantage of this circuit is that one side
of the crystal 12 along with one side of any parallel frequency-adjustment capacitor
are grounded.
[0027] FIG. 10 illustrates a circuit diagram of a Miller oscillator such as that shown in
FIG. 9 that has been modified to form an oscillator of the present invention. Again,
it has the two-pole SAW resonator filter 18 having its first port input terminals
20 coupled in place of the crystal 12 between the gate of FET 40 and ground. The second
port terminals 22 form an output from which the oscillator frequency is taken. Again,
the amplifying device 40 may be any kind of gain device such as a transistor or a
FET.
[0028] Many other crystal oscillator circuits exist and there is a considerable body of
literature showing examples of circuits that worked with the design procedure unstated.
There are many existing excellent surveys of crystal oscillator types and performance.
[0029] Thus, there has been disclosed a novel oscillator circuit which is a crystal-controlled
feedback oscillator circuit that has been improved by replacing the crystal with one
port of a two-port surface acoustic wave resonator filter and extracting the oscillation
frequency at the terminals of the other port of the filter. The improvement can be
made to any crystal-controlled oscillator circuit that has an amplifier, a signal
feedback circuit, a crystal for controlling the oscillator frequency, and an output
signal terminal.
[0030] While the invention has been described in connection with a preferred embodiment,
it is not intended to limit the scope of the invention to the particular form set
forth, but, on the contrary, it is intended to cover such alternatives, modifications,
and equivalents as may be included within the spirit and scope of the invention as
defined by the appended claims.
1. In a crystal-controlled oscillator circuit having an amplifier, a signal feedback
circuit, a crystal for controlling the oscillator frequency, and an output signal
terminal, the improvement including:
a piezoelectric material having first and second electrical signal ports thereon;
said first signal port having a low-loss, primarily inductive characteristic replacing
said crystal in said oscillator circuit; and
said second signal port forming said output signal terminal for providing said oscillator
frequency with substantially reduced harmonics when compared to the output of said
crystal-controlled oscillator.
2. The improvement of claim 1 further including a two-port SAW resonator filter as the
piezoelectric material having said first and second ports thereon.
3. The improvement as in claim 2 wherein said crystal-controlled oscillator is a Colpitts
oscillator circuit.
4. The improvement as in claim 2 wherein said crystal-controlled oscillator circuit is
a Pierce oscillator circuit.
5. The improvement as in claim 2 wherein said crystal-controlled oscillator is a Miller
oscillator circuit.
6. The improvement as in claim 2 wherein said crystal-controlled oscillator is a Clapp
oscillator circuit.
7. The improvement as in claim 3 further including:
a transistor as said amplifier, said transistor having a base, a collector, and an
emitter;
a first resistor coupled between said emitter and a ground potential;
first and second series connected capacitors coupled from said collector to said ground
potential;
an electrical power source;
an inductance coupling the power source to the collector of said transistor;
a pair of series coupled resistors coupling the power source to said ground potential;
a third capacitor coupled between said ground potential and said transistor base,
said transistor base also being connected to the junction between said pair of series
coupled resistors; and
said first signal port of said SAW resonator filter being connected in series-resonance
mode from a point between said first and second series connected capacitors to the
emitter of said transistor.
8. The improvement as in claim 3 further including:
a transistor as said amplifier, said transistor having a base, a collector, and an
emitter;
a first resistor coupled between said emitter and a ground potential;
first and second series connected capacitors coupled from said collector to said ground
potential;
an electric power source;
an inductor coupling the power source to the collector of said transistor;
a pair of series connected resistors connected between the power source and the ground
potential; and
said first signal port of said SAW resonator filter being connected between ground
potential and said transistor base, said transistor base also being connected to a
point between said pair of series connected resistors, said first signal port forming
a series-resonant circuit to ground said transistor base.
9. The improvement as in claim 1 wherein said amplifier is a Field Effect Transistor
(FET).
10. The improvement as in claim 3 wherein:
said amplifier is a transistor having a collector, an emitter, and a base; and
said first signal port of said SAW resonator filter provides both the oscillation
frequency and the feedback between said collector and emitter of said transistor.
11. The improvement as in claim 3 wherein:
said amplifier is a transistor having a collector, an emitter, and a base; and
said first signal port of said SAW resonator filter is connected between said transistor
base and ground to establish said oscillator frequency.
12. The improvement as in claim 4 wherein:
said amplifier is a FET transistor having a source, a drain, and a gate; and
said first signal port of said SAW resonator filter is coupled between said FET transistor
drain and said FET transistor gate to provide feedback and to establish said oscillation
frequency.
13. The improvement as in claim 5 wherein:
said amplifier is a FET transistor having a source, a drain, and a gate;
an output tank circuit coupled to said drain; and
said first signal port of said SAW resonator filter being coupled between said gate
and said source of said FET transistor to establish said oscillation frequency.
14. The improvement as in claim 6 wherein:
said amplifier is a transistor having a base, collector, and an emitter; and
said first signal port of said SAW resonator filter being coupled between said collector
and ground for establishing said oscillation frequency.